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by dd8601fn 3 days ago
I did a deep binge on two or three projects I would never do, and like five small ones that would have consumed months.

It felt like that, kinda, for a bit. Now whenever it does something for me I get nothing. I didn’t do it… the chatbot did. What’s for me to celebrate? How can there be any real pride or satisfaction for a thing that was just handed to me because I asked for it?

If anything it diminishes my satisfaction looking back on previous projects. They’re “a few hours with a chatbot”, now.

The things I had to learn and the informed decisions I had to make? All pointless trivia, now. A child could do it.

The magic and possibilities parts just all wore off after a heavy run, and I don’t know if that’s ever coming back.

2 comments

I hear what you and the other sibling comment are saying. I, thankfully, somehow, am able to focus more on the results than the process. Having fun playing a game (that AFAIK no longer exists) with my family is still having fun. Having people using a new apt cacher that fixes problems with existing ones, and also can survive the recent DDoS, is still a really great thing.

But, I'm not going to yuck your yum. I appreciate the people who do jointery using hand tools, even if I'm out here with a track saw and a router.

Do you feel the same way about cloning a GitHub repo and building it? It, too, achieved a result.

The track saw and router, imo, are existing libraries.

> The things I had to learn and the informed decisions I had to make? All pointless trivia, now. A child could do it.

Probably this is a hyperbole. Did you do the experiment? I expect that the child won't be able to do it. Ask an adult. Same thing. Ask an expert of the domain. Maybe but not as fast or as good as you.

Yes that’s more “how it feels” than something I’ve had kids actually try.